as summer homes are excluded from certain areas so that the 
camper will not be left high and dry. The only difference is 
that where a public camp ground requires a forty, a public 
wilderness area requires a few fwnships. 
Roads and wilderness are merely a case of the pig 
in the parlor. We now recognize that the pig is all right-- 
for bacon, which we all eat, $ut there no doubt was a ti-e, soon 
after the discovery that many pigs meant much bacon, when our 
ancestors assumed that because the pig was so useful an in- 
stitution that he should be welcomed at all times and places. 
And I suppose that the first "enthusiast" -Who raised the 
question of limiting his distribution was construea Vo be un- 
economic, visionary, and anti-pig. 
ALDO LEOPOLD 
 
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